Iowa High School BEDS count 24-25

In the old four class system for football Starmont and MV were 3A, Springville, Center Point, and Alburnett were 1A, and the rest were 2A when I graduated in 1975. A lot has changed.
Yeah, Starmont consolidated with the merger of Strawberry Point, Arlington and Lamont in 1964. I believe at one point they were the largest school in the state as far as area of the district. Now they still have a large area but are pretty tiny in enrollment. Having to merge again and add area would be pretty difficult.
 
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I remember when St. Eds was 2A
South Central Calhoun was 2A when we first went together.
Rockwell City was 1A
Southern Cal was 1A at one point in time
Manson was 2A

just amazing what the enrollment is doing to rural schools.
 
I remember when St. Eds was 2A
South Central Calhoun was 2A when we first went together.
Rockwell City was 1A
Southern Cal was 1A at one point in time
Manson was 2A

just amazing what the enrollment is doing to rural schools.
Few good paying jobs in the rural areas, and farms keep getting larger and larger, pushing more people out of the land. The population in rural areas is going down all over the midwest, and there is there is not going to be some miracle to stop it. County wide schools slow the process down by keeping enrollment up, but give it 10 to 15 years and they are right back to where they were before they merged class size wise. Davis Co. 20 years ago was graduating classes around 110 kids, now they are in the high 80's. Small schools like Moulton have 10 to 12 in most classes and graduated 8 this past spring.
 
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Schools like Grundy Center and IC Regina could have easily moved up a class and competed very well , might not have won state championships, but they would be fine. Van Meter is another school that is dominating over many sports that could do it.
There's probably a dozen of those small schools that could/should be bumped up a class. Parity is a good thing in my opinion, especially at the high school level and should be one of the goals of the sanctioning body in my opinion. You see attempts at parity in the pros with things like a salary cap so I never understand why there isn't more effort (other than looking at enrollment numbers) put into it at the high school level.
 
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1993 Class 2A playoff field, and their 2025 football classification:
5A - Dallas Center-Grimes
3A - MOC-Floyd Valley, Carroll, Solon, Mount Vernon, Iowa Falls (no Alden yet), Center Point-Urbana
2A - Denver

1A - West Lyon, Emmetsburg, Missouri Valley, Sigourney-Keota
A - Starmont,
Wapsie Valley, West Hancock
n/a - Northwest (Laurens-Marathon/Albert City-Truesdale) -- AC-T only has elementary now; HS goes to Sioux Central. L-M is only K-8; HS goes to Pocahontas.

And Northwest actually beat both Carroll and DC-G to get to the semis.
 
The one that always gets me is Turkey Valley, they were the 6th largest 3A school in the mid-70s and now are down to 8 man and most likely end up either dissolving or just getting absorbed by New Hampton in the next decade.

Families simply don't need to spit out 10 kids to have a viable farming operation anymore...
 
The one that always gets me is Turkey Valley, they were the 6th largest 3A school in the mid-70s and now are down to 8 man and most likely end up either dissolving or just getting absorbed by New Hampton in the next decade.

Families simply don't need to spit out 10 kids to have a viable farming operation anymore...
Its not just that they arent having 10 kids, there are way less families and small farms. Used to be you would drive a country road and there were several small farms every mile. Now they are all giant farms, no houses for miles, every building sight has been bulldozed for a few more acres. So no more acreages to live on, just giant corporate farms.

Way less people in these small districts.
 
The one that always gets me is Turkey Valley, they were the 6th largest 3A school in the mid-70s and now are down to 8 man and most likely end up either dissolving or just getting absorbed by New Hampton in the next decade.

Families simply don't need to spit out 10 kids to have a viable farming operation anymore...
We made a few trips past that school on the way up to Decorah the last couple years while my son was getting recruited to swim for Luther. Every time we drove by there I kept asking myself why is that still a school.
 
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The one that always gets me is Turkey Valley, they were the 6th largest 3A school in the mid-70s and now are down to 8 man and most likely end up either dissolving or just getting absorbed by New Hampton in the next decade.

Families simply don't need to spit out 10 kids to have a viable farming operation anymore...

Audubon is probably a good comp in western Iowa, though they're still holding their own enrollment-wise.
1977 - 3A
1989 - 2A
1998 - 1A
2012 - A
2016 - 8-man
 
Audubon is probably a good comp in western Iowa, though they're still holding their own enrollment-wise.
1977 - 3A
1989 - 2A
1998 - 1A
2012 - A
2016 - 8-man
Class and enrollment can be a little deceiving. I graduated with 50 at lake mills. We were a smaller class for them and were a small 2A. They have been graduating low 50s now (so similar sized) but are an A school.
 
Class and enrollment can be a little deceiving. I graduated with 50 at lake mills. We were a smaller class for them and were a small 2A. They have been graduating low 50s now (so similar sized) but are an A school.

It can be, but not in this instance.

Total school district enrollment (PK-12), comparing and contrasting. I would love to have a more expansive data set, but this will do.

District1996-972012-13
South O'Brien921628 (-32%)
Audubon895579 (-35%)
North Polk8871,438 (+62%)
Gilbert8461,378 (+63%)
 
Audubon is probably a good comp in western Iowa, though they're still holding their own enrollment-wise.
They did just move to Rolling Valley Conference where BED numbers are under 100 so they must expect some downward movement.
 
Just read that Hoover and Roosevelt High Schools have merged their football teams. Only 20 kids out for football at Hoover. They were 0-9 last year and Roosevelt had only 1 win. Hope those kids get to enjoy some success this year

 
Just read that Hoover and Roosevelt High Schools have merged their football teams. Only 20 kids out for football at Hoover. They were 0-9 last year and Roosevelt had only 1 win. Hope those kids get to enjoy some success this year

This is sad, but agree that I’m hopeful they can win some games now. I feel like Roosevelt has had some success semi-recently
 
Just read that Hoover and Roosevelt High Schools have merged their football teams. Only 20 kids out for football at Hoover. They were 0-9 last year and Roosevelt had only 1 win. Hope those kids get to enjoy some success this year

Just no real football tradition at Hoover. Some darn good basketball teams over the years, but even when Hoover was more "suburbanish" (yes, I am that old), they had amazing drama and band and tennis and basketball....just not much football success. Now the population at Hoover is much different. This could be a chance for the players to taste some success, but they still have to play a 5A schedule.
 
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There's probably a dozen of those small schools that could/should be bumped up a class. Parity is a good thing in my opinion, especially at the high school level and should be one of the goals of the sanctioning body in my opinion. You see attempts at parity in the pros with things like a salary cap so I never understand why there isn't more effort (other than looking at enrollment numbers) put into it at the high school level.


Because it’s high school. There’s no money at stake so who cares?
 
Just no real football tradition at Hoover. Some darn good basketball teams over the years, but even when Hoover was more "suburbanish" (yes, I am that old), they had amazing drama and band and tennis and basketball....just not much football success. Now the population at Hoover is much different. This could be a chance for the players to taste some success, but they still have to play a 5A schedule.
The only way the DM metro schools are ever going to compete with the suburban schools around them in sports, is to either merge all of their extra curricular teams, primarily football into one team that has all four schools feeding into it. Or take one of the existing schools and create some type of magnet school that emphasizes sports and extra curricula's, a public version of Moeller HS in Cincinnati Ohio. Otherwise the best players will continue to leave the metro for the Dowlings, SE Polk and W. Des Moines of the area.
 
The only way the DM metro schools are ever going to compete with the suburban schools around them in sports, is to either merge all of their extra curricular teams, primarily football into one team that has all four schools feeding into it. Or take one of the existing schools and create some type of magnet school that emphasizes sports and extra curricula's, a public version of Moeller HS in Cincinnati Ohio. Otherwise the best players will continue to leave the metro for the Dowlings, SE Polk and W. Des Moines of the area.
I honestly wouldn't be surprised if you started seeing this sort of happen in Waterloo prior to the schools merging in 2028 especially if there is a coaching vacancy. Who's going to apply for a job that's only going to be around for 2-3 years especially when several sports are already combined, like soccer, cross country, swimming and tennis. West is looking for a new baseball coach for next year after the AD tried to do it and went 23-87 over the last 3 years and decided to quit as baseball coach after parents tried to stage a coup. Talking with a board member about it he thinks they'd be better off just combining those teams now and just get it over with.
 
Just no real football tradition at Hoover. Some darn good basketball teams over the years, but even when Hoover was more "suburbanish" (yes, I am that old), they had amazing drama and band and tennis and basketball....just not much football success. Now the population at Hoover is much different. This could be a chance for the players to taste some success, but they still have to play a 5A schedule.

It's amazing to me the state of Iowa just absolutely insists on keeping their boot on the throat of schools like this. Just no reason to not have some kind of relegation or ability for schools to get off the mat or breath a little in a lower class. That should be done everywhere if you ask me.